2011 Articles
Toppling the Tripod: Sustainable Development, Constructive Ambiguity and the Environmental Challenge
Discussions of global environmental governance seem to have gotten nowhere in the last thirty years despite environmental problems that continue to grow in scope and magnitude. Here, the role of sustainable development in that failure is examined, particularly the constructively ambiguous nature of the paradigm. It is suggested that an emphasis on the shifting, contextualized and relative term ―"needs" in the definition of sustainable development has led to paralysis at the international level in addressing environmental problems, particularly climate change. Contradictions that emerge when sustainable development is formalized in economic models as weak and strong sustainability are discussed. Finally, promising future pathways for environmental actions are explored.
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Files
- 146-371-2-PB__1_.pdf application/pdf 181 KB Download File
Also Published In
- Title
- Consilience: The Journal of Sustainable Development
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.7916/consilience.v0i5.4434
More About This Work
- Academic Units
- Earth Institute
- Published Here
- December 2, 2015